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These and fictional
These have sometimes been identified as another, separate work, the Ezra Memorial ( EM ), but other scholars believe the EM to be fictional and heavily altered by later editors.
These supplements were overseen by Keith Herber and provided backgrounds and adventures set in Lovecraft's fictional towns of Arkham, Kingsport, Innsmouth, Dunwich, and their environs.
These developments began to give a new meaning to what was termed " modernism ": It embraced discontinuity, rejecting smooth change in everything from biology to fictional character development and filmmaking.
These squatters built their own property under the assumption of a fictional piece of folklore, leading to the developments of small holdings around a Tŷ unnos, or " house in a night ".
These letters include everything from personal letters to official government correspondence ( mostly in English ), letters to fellow humanist scholars ( in Latin ), including several epistolary tracts, verse epistles, prefatory letters ( some fictional ) to several of More's own works, letters to his children and their tutors ( in Latin ), and the so-called " prison-letters " ( in English ) which he exchanged with his oldest daughter, Margaret Roper while he was imprisoned in the Tower of London awaiting execution.
These were then replaced by the fictional characters John Doe and Richard Roe.
These fictional data were arranged to show either a negative or positive association: some subjects were told that a risk-taking firefighter did better, while others were told they did less well than a risk-averse colleague.
These involve Bart asking to speak to some fictional person with a provocative name ( e. g. Mike Rotch, aka " My crotch "), which, when Moe says it, makes it dirty / naughty and / or insulting to himself, making everyone in the bar laugh at him.
These works contain one of the earliest fictional depictions of a generation ship.
These dramas typically depict fictional characters who die and learn whether they will go to heaven or hell.
These stories are illustrated by genuine clips from the ITV archives, which, interspersed with Mills ' own heavily-contrived commentaries and bizarre non-sequiturs, come together to reveal surreal fictional backstories.
These can be easily edited ( known as repainting ), so that a model can adopt any paint scheme imaginable, fictional or real.
These historical mysteries are presented as memoirs of fictional Decius Caecilius Metellus the Younger ; Milo is a trusted friend of Metellus.
These historic scenes are depicted alongside a fictional plot in which a Huguenot family is caught among the events.
These dramatic personal experiences feature prominently in Frame's autobiographical trilogy and director Jane Campion's popular film adaptation of the texts, with recognisably autobiographical elements further resurfacing in many of her fictional publications.
These daimyo names are not fictional, nor is there any question that something actually happened in.
These coupons, an incentive for non-credit purchases, are a national cultural fixture and feature the fictional character Sandy McTire on every bill.
These stories take place in the fictional rural Latin American village of Palomar, where modern technology and rampant consumerism have yet to reach — or even phone lines.
These works, " minor classics " of English literature, are set in the contemporaneous fictional country of Ruritania and spawned the genre known as Ruritanian romance.
These are the first lines of the poem " Pale Fire " by " John Shade ", a fictional poet created by Vladimir Nabokov, for his novel Pale Fire.
These decorative umlauts have been parodied in film and fiction ; in the mockumentary film This Is Spın ̈ al Tap ( spelled with an umlaut mark over the n and a dotless i ), fictional rocker David St. Hubbins ( Michael McKean ) says, " It's like a pair of eyes.
These films ( The House on 92nd Street, Boomerang, 13 Rue Madeleine ) were widely imitated, and the style soon became used even for completely fictional stories such as The Naked City.
These fictional worlds were the product of fertile imagination fed by reading, discussion, and a passion for literature.
“ Critics to date, however, have tended to focus on only one or two of each writer ’ s works, to illustrate particular critical points .” These analyses of a few key pieces are hardly in-depth or as comprehensive as the criticism and analyses of their fictional contemporaries.

These and premises
These deduction rules tell exactly when a formula can be derived from a set of premises.
These works were displayed in Leeds, either in the University or the premises of the Leeds Arts Club, between 1913 and 1923.
These were compared with any given premises, and incompatible ones crossed off.
These were donated to university by the War Office after the end of fighting, in time for the transfer from the high street premises in 1920.
These premises apply to the entire spectrum of guerrilla communication because each tactic intends to disrupt cognitive schemas and thought processing.
These premises were not accepted by the jury, who convicted Williams after 28 hours of deliberation on May 1, 1981.
" These premises led Schenker to seek the key to an understanding of music in the traditional discipline of counterpoint, since this is the type of theory the " German Masters " themselves had studied.
These problems may be difficult to resolve since they often originate from places other than the customer's premises.
In April 1973, Koch coined the term " Watergate Seven " when, in response to U. S. Senator Lowell P. Weicker, Jr .' s indicating that one of the men in Watergate scandal had been ordered in the spring of 1972 to keep certain Senators and Representatives under surveillance, posted a sign on the door of his United States Congress office saying, ' These premises were surveilled by the Watergate Seven.
These devices all describe the customer premises wireless system as the Subscriber Unit " SU ", and the operator transmitter delivering the last mile local loop services as the " Access Point " ( AP ).
These are the premises now occupied by the museum.
These were probably the premises previously occupied by Mulliners ( London ) Ltd.
These concerns are legitimate and scenario planning would gain in academic standing if more research were conducted on its comparative performance and underlying theoretical premises.
These premises soon proved to be inadequate however, and a new building at the foot of University Avenue was designed by the architect Alan McNaughton of Arthur & McNaughton in the Scots Baronial style and erected between 1929 and 1931, with the women of the Queen Margaret Union ( QMU ) moving into the John McIntyre Building in 1932.
These cases are sometimes referred to as " third party premises liability " cases and they represent a highly complex and dynamic area of tort law.
These premises are situated at the corner of Francis Street and Chapeltown Road, and was the former site of Willow House built in 1849 by Benjamin Randall Vickers of Vickers Oils, Leeds who founded the first Wesleyan congregation on Willow House premises The present facilities replace the former Roscoe Place Methodist Church which was opened in 1862 and extended in 1882 situated at the Sheepscar end of Chapeltown Road next to the Archives Libray building.
These premises include the " RDS Arena ", " RDS Simmonscourt ", " RDS Main Hall " and other venues which are used regularly for exhibitions, concerts and sporting events, including regular use by the Leinster Rugby team.
These rules set out in minute detail how premises were to be constructed, maintained and managed.
These legislative changes coincided with demographic changes — the young audiences who had patronized the unlicensed dances and discos of the mid-to-late Sixties were now ageing into their late teens and early twenties, and could now be legally admitted into licensed premises.
These may connect to the regular phone system on the system side of the demarcation point, but typically connect on the customer side ahead of all phones within the monitored premises so that the alarm system can seize the line by cutting-off any active calls and call the monitoring company if needed.
The term " Watergate Seven " was coined a few months later, in April 1973, by American lawyer, politician, and political commentator Ed Koch, who, in response to U. S. Senator Lowell P. Weicker, Jr .' s indicating that one of the men in Watergate bugging case had been ordered in the spring of 1972 to keep certain Senators and Representatives under surveillance, posted a sign on the door of his United States Congress office saying, ' These premises were surveilled by the Watergate Seven.
These premises were bombed and repaired no less than seven times during World War II.
These rights are important in cases such as those before us, where recipients have challenged proposed terminations as resting on incorrect or misleading factual premises or on misapplication of rules or policies to the facts of particular cases.

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